Chancroid
Bacterial
Disease
(curable with medication)
- Chancroid
(pronounced SHANG-chroid), also called soft chancre, is a
bacterial disease that causes genital ulcers.
- Sexual
transmission of chancroid occurs through skin-to-skin contact
with open sore(s).
- Symptoms of
chancroid are one or more genital ulcers and painful lymph
glands in the groin. The ulcer begins as a tender bump that
becomes a pus-filled, open sore. It is soft (unlike a syphilis
chancre that is hard or rubbery to touch).
- For women,
the sore is usually not painful, and may not be noticed; but in
men, the ulcer can be very painful.
- Chancroid
can be treated with antibiotics. Successful treatment cures the
infection, symptoms go away and it's no longer contagious (able
to be spread to another person). It is important to take all the
antibiotics from start to finish.
- If you do
get chancroid, avoid touching the infected area to prevent the
chance of auto inoculation (re-infecting yourself somewhere else
on your body).
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